ANOTHER LOVE IS BLIND BABY BOMBSHELL: Is Netflix’s Social Experiment Creating a Generation of TRAUMA BABIES? Bliss Poureetezadi and Zack Goytowski are expecting their second child, but experts are SILENT on the psychological toll on children born from a rushed, televised “pod marriage.”
This isn’t a sweet Valentine’s Day story—it’s a DEEPLY ALARMING trend. These couples meet through a wall, marry within WEEKS, and are now racing to populate their fractured families. What are the long-term effects on these children, born into unions formed under the glaring lights of reality TV desperation? The show’s producers are LAUGHING ALL THE WAY TO THE BANK, while psychologists whisper about attachment disorders and instability.
Bliss revealed she felt “off” after a trip to Japan, a detail that exposes the chaotic, unplanned nature of these pregnancies amidst the whirlwind of their manufactured fame. Her method of telling Zack by FAKING A PANIC about their first child, Galileo, is a disturbing glimpse into the performative, drama-fueled environment that now serves as these babies’ foundational reality. This is not normal family planning; this is CONTENT CREATION.
As other couples from the show spectacularly implode, these expanding families become living, breathing time capsules of a fleeting TV moment. The network celebrates, but we must ask: Are these children destined to be nothing more than RATINGS BABIES, their lives forever entangled with a parent’s fifteen minutes of fame? The truth is a ratings stunt that doesn’t end when the cameras stop rolling—it’s inherited.




